1 / 16

Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts

Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts. Word Origins. ‘Acid’ comes from the Latin word ‘ acidus ’ meaning sour. ‘Base’ comes from the Arabic word ‘ alqili ’ or ‘alkali’ meaning the ashes of the Kali plant.

meriel
Télécharger la présentation

Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts

  2. Word Origins • ‘Acid’ comes from the Latin word ‘acidus’ meaning sour. • ‘Base’ comes from the Arabic word ‘alqili’ or ‘alkali’ meaning the ashes of the Kali plant. • ‘Salt’ comes from the Latin word ‘salarium’. Roman soldiers were paid in salt which they used to preserve food. Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts

  3. Familiar Examples • Acids, bases, and salts are part of our daily lives. The orange juice we drink contains citric acid; soap is made using sodium hydroxide, a base; and we flavor our foods with sodium chloride, table salt. • Stronger acids and bases are also part of our daily life, but must be handled carefully (e.g. car battery acid, and base used for cleaning drains). Intro to Acids, Bases, & Salts

  4. Acids • Have a sharp sour taste (vinegar, lemon). • Dissolve many metals. • Turn blue litmus paper red in an aqueous solution. • Contain hydrogen ions (H+) and can be recognized by the ‘H’ that appears in their formulas. • Acids neutralize bases. Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  5. Acids Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  6. Bases • Have a bitter taste; are slippery to the touch. • Dissolve many metals. • Turn red litmus paper blue in an aqueous solution. • Contain hydroxide ions (OH-) and can be recognized by the ‘OH’ that appears in their formulas. • Bases can neutralize acids. Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  7. Bases Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  8. Salts • Common salts are made up of sodium (Na) or potassium (K) combined with a halogen. • Solutions of acids, bases, and salts all contain ions, and thus can conduct electricity. • When an acid and base react, water and a salt are produced. • This reaction is called a neutralization, therefore, a salt is neither an acid nor a base. • HCl (aq) + NaOH (aq)  NaCl(aq) + H2O • (acid) (base) (salt) (water) Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  9. Salts Properties of Acids, Bases, & Salts

  10. pH • Chemist use a pH scale to indicate the strength of an acid or a base. The number is usually on a scale of 0 to 14, measured with a pH meter. • A pH below 7 indicates a solution is acidic. • A pH above 7 indicates a solution is basic. • A pH of 7 indicates a neutral solution (such as pure water). Strength of Acids & Bases

  11. pH Strength of Acids & Bases 2, stomach acid 7, pure water 10, sea water 14, NaOH

  12. pH • pH level can be measured with special dyes called acid-base indicators: • ‒ litmus paper contains several indicators that change color at different pH’s level. • ‒ When dipped into a solution, the paper’s color indicator the approximate pH of the solution. Strength of Acids & Bases

  13. pH Strength of Acids & Bases Acid Base

  14. pH • Another indicator is phenolphthalein: a colorless liquid which turns pink in basic solutions, but remains colorless in acidic and neutral solutions. • ‒ Turns pink above a pH of 9, and at very high pH values, it is again colorless. • ‒ To avoid high pH values, thus ruining the phenolphthalein test, avoid making solutions too concentrated or too dilute. Strength of Acids & Bases

  15. pH Strength of Acids & Bases phenolphthalein

  16. pH • Two other indicactors: • ‒ Methyl orange; red in acid; yellow in base. • ‒ Bromothymol Blue; for weak acids and bases, yellow below pH 6 and blue above pH 7.6 • Note: Indicators work only when placed in an aqueous solutions thus solids must first be dissolved in a solution (water, HCl, …) Strength of Acids & Bases

More Related